6. Resuscitation.Enthusing over an event in recorded opera

Not long ago, discussing Handel's opera seria'Silla',
I described Handel as the greatest composer of works in that once formidable
genre. Nowadays, that judgement would be generally supported, but it wasn't
universally valid in Handel's day. When opera seria fell into
oblivion, many fine composers dedicated to it were almost totally forgotten,
whereas Handel survived because of the multiplicity of his gifts. During
the heyday of the classical baroque, Alessandro Scarlatti was esteemed for
his operas no less than was Handel, while in Handel's native Germany
Reinhard Keiser was even more fanatically fêted. Johann Mattheson,
no slouch as a composer, music theorist and impresario, described Keiser
-- admittedly in an obituary notice -- as 'the greatest opera composer
in the world', and in a biographical compendium to then contemporary
music, bluntly presented him as 'le premier homme du monde!'

Today, we know little about Keiser, and hear almost nothing of his music,
mostly because he remained faithful to an art of music-theatre that, encouraging
the myth that man had taken over God's place, was pitifully subject
to fashion's ephemerality. Yet although it's unlikely that Keiser
can rival Handel's plenitude, he was undoubtedly a composer of exceptional
talents, bolstered by experience, since he composed more than a hundred
heroic operas, as compared with Handel's sixty-plus!